Resource Recycling
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
    • All
    • Certification Scorecard
    • Industry Announcements
    • Opinion

    Certification Scorecard — Week of July 6, 2026

    Tech giant pens detailed ‘plastic-free packaging’ guide

    What Google’s latest report means for ITAD

    Unpacking the Starbucks cup data

    Unpacking the Starbucks cup data

    Amazon cutting out more flexible packaging

    Amazon’s AWS hardware reuse is measured

    MP Materials breaks ground on rare earth magnet campus in North Texas

    ERI confirms ITAD shift toward minerals

    Industry announcements for January 2026

    Industry announcements for July 2026

  • Conferences
    • Resource Recycling Conference
    • Plastics Recycling Conference
    • E-Scrap: The Longevity Conference
    • Textiles Recovery Summit
  • Publications
    • E-Scrap News
    • Plastics Recycling Update
    • Policy Now
    • Resource Recycling
    • Other Topics
      • All Topics
      • Brand Owners
      • Critical Minerals
      • Glass
      • Grant Watch / RFPs
      • Markets
      • Organics
      • Packaging
      • Research
      • Technology
      • Textiles
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Resource Recycling
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
    • All
    • Certification Scorecard
    • Industry Announcements
    • Opinion

    Certification Scorecard — Week of July 6, 2026

    Tech giant pens detailed ‘plastic-free packaging’ guide

    What Google’s latest report means for ITAD

    Unpacking the Starbucks cup data

    Unpacking the Starbucks cup data

    Amazon cutting out more flexible packaging

    Amazon’s AWS hardware reuse is measured

    MP Materials breaks ground on rare earth magnet campus in North Texas

    ERI confirms ITAD shift toward minerals

    Industry announcements for January 2026

    Industry announcements for July 2026

  • Conferences
    • Resource Recycling Conference
    • Plastics Recycling Conference
    • E-Scrap: The Longevity Conference
    • Textiles Recovery Summit
  • Publications
    • E-Scrap News
    • Plastics Recycling Update
    • Policy Now
    • Resource Recycling
    • Other Topics
      • All Topics
      • Brand Owners
      • Critical Minerals
      • Glass
      • Grant Watch / RFPs
      • Markets
      • Organics
      • Packaging
      • Research
      • Technology
      • Textiles
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Resource Recycling
No Result
View All Result
Home E-Scrap

Basel proposals could upend export landscape

Colin StaubbyColin Staub
February 11, 2021
in E-Scrap
Cargo containers at port in Turkey.
The Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and their Disposal is an international treaty governing how waste is moved around the world. | phil berry/Shutterstock

The Basel Convention has published multiple proposals that would restrict U.S. exports of scrap electronics. The changes will be considered at a meeting this summer.

The governments of Switzerland and Ghana last year announced plans to propose a change in the Basel Convention, covering how exports of some end-of-life electronics are managed. The European Union also recently proposed a change that would expand the scope of devices that are categorized as “waste.”

The Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and their Disposal is an international treaty governing how waste is moved around the world. It was first implemented in 1992. More than 180 countries are party to the convention, but the U.S. is not. That fact complicates how any change to the convention impacts exports from the U.S.

Both of the proposals for alterations to the treaty were released in December and were sent to Basel delegates in late January for comment. They are slated to be discussed at a Basel meeting in late July.

One processor anticipates significant disruption within the U.S. industry if the changes are adopted.

“For U.S. companies, it could be extremely punitive with us not being a member of the convention,” said Craig Boswell, president of Dallas-based HOBI International. “All of a sudden our competitive landscape changes dramatically.”

What would be changed

The Swiss-Ghanaian proposal would impact exports of some materials currently not classified as hazardous under the convention. This includes electronics destined “for direct reuse, and not for recycling or final disposal,” as well as some circuit boards and electronic components.

The proposal would reclassify those electronics so that they are subject to the same shipment regulations as hazardous materials, a category that includes CRT glass, devices with batteries containing mercury, cadmium or lead, and more.

The second proposal, from the EU, expands the definition of “waste” to cover devices that are being prepared for reuse. Such devices are currently not classified as waste. Under the change, once the devices are reused they would no longer be considered a waste, but during the process of preparing for reuse the devices would technically be waste. That would make these devices a covered waste under the convention.

“Preparing for reuse” can include activities such as “checking, cleaning, repair, refurbishment,” according to the proposal.

An analysis from law firm Beveridge & Diamond said the proposals would “dramatically expand controls and trade bans governing international shipments of used products managed for reuse and non-hazardous electrical and electronic waste destined for materials recovery.”

The law firm wrote that the EU proposal would “likely prompt many countries world-wide to apply waste import and export controls on shipments of used products destined for repair and refurbishment.”

Impact for U.S. companies

For trade between Basel-party countries, the reclassifications in both proposals would add a requirement that the exporter notify and receive consent from authorities within the importing country before shipment. Exports of devices destined for reuse would essentially require another level of paperwork before they could move forward.

But trade between the U.S. and Basel-party countries could be a bit more complicated. U.S. companies can freely trade materials that are not covered by the Basel Convention with Basel-party countries. But the Basel Convention contains a rule that party countries cannot trade covered materials with non-party countries.

If devices destined for reuse become covered under the convention, exports of those devices from the U.S. to party countries could be considered illegal within the importing country.

“The combination of the two proposals seems to be altering the traditional way we’ve looked at used electronic equipment,” said Boswell, who also serves as chairman of the Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries (ISRI) Electronics Division.

As an example of the impact, Boswell noted that HOBI sells smartphones that are destined for reuse.

“Right now, when my company would put those phones up for sale – an iPhone 6, tested, working – the highest bidder may be in France, may be in Dubai, could be in Peru,” Boswell said. “The highest bidder may not be a trading company in the U.S., a reseller in the U.S.”

If the Basel proposals are approved, shipping those smartphones to another country could be prohibited altogether, cutting off a substantial sales outlet for electronics recycling firms.

“To me, potentially this is the biggest issue facing the industry this year,” Boswell said.

Not far enough?

The Basel Action Network (BAN), a Seattle-based nonprofit organization that advocates for increased controls on waste exports, says the Swiss-Ghanaian proposal “fails to solve the real e-waste problem.”

Shortly after the proposal was announced last year, BAN published comments stating that the Swiss-Ghanaian proposal did not go far enough by adding all used electronics, whether hazardous or not, into the category of materials covered by Basel controls.

“This idea fails to close the real loophole causing so much of the exploitive abuse of developing countries – the export of non-functional electronic equipment, hazardous or not, as ‘non-waste,'” BAN wrote. “It is this latter problem which is of greatest concern – not the export of non-hazardous e-wastes.”

BAN instead advocated that all devices, including those that are destined for reuse, be considered a waste material when exported. Such a move would be more in line with the EU proposal, to consider such devices waste until they are actually reused.

“The traders have been allowed to [export] in the name of repair and reuse and the false claim that such materials can help the poorer countries and therefore cannot be ‘wastes,'” BAN wrote. “Too often these claims prove to be false and the material is simply dumped or found to be unrepairable.”
 

Tags: Trade & Tariffs
TweetShare
Colin Staub

Colin Staub

Colin Staub was a reporter and associate editor at Resource Recycling until August 2025.

Related Posts

Novelis posts steady Q2 amid tariffs, fire recovery

Tariff updates unlikely to impact recyclers

byPaul Lane
June 18, 2026

Revisions under Section 232 would lower the tariffs on certain materials through 2027.

Aluminum can bale close up.

Aluminum scrap exports face scrutiny under HB 9161

byStefanie Valentic
June 9, 2026

A new House bill would direct the US International Trade Commission to investigate whether US aluminum scrap exports to adversarial...

APR, industry groups testify on overcapacity

APR, industry groups testify on overcapacity

byAntoinette Smith
May 8, 2026

Steve Alexander, CEO of APR, pointed to China as driving global oversupply despite fluctuating PET imports to the US and...

Volatility reshapes outlook for US metals businesses

byScott Snowden
April 15, 2026

Panelists at the ReMA conference in Las Vegas said tariffs, reshoring and geopolitical tension are remaking trade flows, lifting US...

Matium raises $8m, adds buyer financing

byAntoinette Smith
April 14, 2026

A trade finance facility from the new Erebor Bank will help bridge the gap between buyer and seller payment terms...

Why global ITAD is stranded in the Gulf

Why global ITAD is stranded in the Gulf

byDavid Daoud
March 16, 2026

As the war in Iran scrambles Middle East trade routes, Dubai’s carefully built role as a command center for global...

Load More
Next Post

First Person Perspective: How a community compost program caught its wave

More Posts

Oregon’s Recycling Modernization Act faces injunction

Oregon’s EPR program posts first-year results

July 6, 2026
Two recycled-content bills gain approval in California

California agriculture seeks SB 54 repeal

July 7, 2026
Unpacking the Starbucks cup data

Unpacking the Starbucks cup data

July 8, 2026
In Our Opinion: Coalitions: The EPR Differentiator

Inside NAW’s constitutional case against packaging EPR

July 6, 2026
EPR fees are a market signal. Here’s what they’re telling you.

Building the infrastructure behind EPR

July 6, 2026
SB 54 draft rules generate debate on rates, review

California increases PET market payments

July 7, 2026
SCS launches chem recycling standard

SCS launches chem recycling standard

July 1, 2026
Utah highway project to reuse pavement

Utah highway project to reuse pavement

July 2, 2026
MP Materials breaks ground on rare earth magnet campus in North Texas

ERI confirms ITAD shift toward minerals

July 3, 2026
Aduro, AstroTurf look at recycling feedstockĀ 

Aduro, AstroTurf look at recycling feedstockĀ 

June 30, 2026
Load More

About & Publications

About Us

Staff

Archive

Magazine

Work With Us

Advertise
Jobs
Contact
Terms and Privacy

Newsletter

Get the latest recycling news and analysis delivered to your inbox every week. Stay ahead on industry trends, policy updates, and insights from programs, processors, and innovators.

Subscribe

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
  • Recycling
  • E-Scrap
  • Plastics
  • Policy Now
  • Conferences
    • E-Scrap Conference
    • Plastics Recycling Conference
    • Resource Recycling Conference
    • Textiles Recovery Summit
  • Magazine
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Archive
  • Jobs
  • Staff
Subscribe
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.